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' G. SHOVE. Cranberry Gatherer.

Patented Jan. 22, 1867.

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GEORGE vSHOVE, OF YARMOUTHPORT, MASSACHUSETTS.

Letters Patent No. 61,476, dated January 22, 1867.

IMPROVEMENT IN GRANBERRY GATHERER.

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TO ALL PERSONS TO WHOM THESE PRESENTS SHALL COME:

Be it known that I, GEORGE SHOVE, of Yarmouthport, in the county ofBarnstable, and State of Massachusetts, have invented a new and usefulor improved Cranberry Gatherer; and do hereby declare the same to befully described in the following specification, and represented in theaccompanying drawings, of which- Figure 1 is a top view.

Figure 2, a front end elevation.

Figure 3, a longitudinal section; and

Figure 4, a side elevation of the said implement.

In such drawings, A is a box-shaped receiver or frame, whose twoopposite sides, a a, are rectangular plates, there being at the rear ofthe receiver, a trough or receiver, B, which goes across it from side toside. Within the receiver, and extending downward at an acute angle withthe plane of the bottom of its sides, a a, is a comb or series ofteeth'or wires, 6 b b, which are arranged at equal distances apart, andproject from a crosshad or bar C. The said bar, C, is disposed in frontof and above the trough, and has a handle,-D, projected upward from itsmiddle, and fastened to the rear cross-bar of a rectangular frame, E,which is arranged within and makes part of the receiver, A, in manner asshown in the drawings. From the foot of every third wire or tooth b ofthe comb, a guard-wire, c, is extended upward to the front cross-bar ofthe frame E. These guard wires are arranged at acute angles with theplane of the implement. It is not essential that each guard-wire shouldextend from every third tooth of the comb, as they may be totallydisconnected from the ends of the said teeth, and be in such number asmaybe desirable, the object of such guard-wires being to force down therunners of the cranberry vines, and to prevent the teeth of the combfrom catching into or on such runners while the cranberry gatherer maybe in use.

In operating with the implement, a person, having hold of its handle, isto push the guards against and through the mass of cranberry vines; Theguards will depress the runners thereof, and the comb-teeth will detachthe berries from the vines, the berries being caused to pass up the comband into the teeth. The side plates, a a, serve to prevent the berriesfrom falling oil the comb in lateral directions, and aid in guiding theminto the trough, and besides, the said side plates, which arelike therunners of a slide, afi'ord a support to the implement when moved alongthe surface of the ground on whichithe cranberry vines may be, and alsoserve as gauges to determine the altitude of the ends of'the comb-teethand prevent them from entering the earth.

What I claim, is- I The combination as well as the arrangement of theguard-wires or guards c c, with the inclined comb or series of wires 6Z1 5.

I also claim the combination as well as the arrangement of the guards c,the inclined comb and the trough B.

I also claim the combination as well as the arrangement of the sideplates a a, the comb'b b b, the guards c c, and the trough B, the wholebeing substantially as hereinbefore explained.

GEO. SHOVE. Witnesses R. H. EDDY, F. P. HALE.

